Assault Support Exercise

07/04/2015

07/04/2015: U.S. Marines conduct an assault support exercise during Weapons and Tactics Instructor (WTI) Course 2-15 at Stoval Airfield near Dateland, Ariz., April 13, 2015.

WTI is a seven week event hosted by Marine Aviation Weapons and Tactics Squadron One (MAWTS-1). MAWTS-1 provides standardized tactical training and certification of unit instructor qualifications to support Marine Aviation Training and Readiness and assists in developing and employing Aviation Weapons and Tactics.

Credit: Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms:4/13/15

 

UH-1Y Venom Urban Close Air Support

07/01/2015

07/01/2015: U.S. Marine pilots flying UH-1Y Venoms provide urban close air support during the Weapons and Tactics Instructor Course (WTI) near Yuma, Ariz., April 3, 2015.

WTI is a seven week event hosted by Marine Aviation Weapons and Tactics Squadron One (MAWTS-1) cadre.

MAWTS-1 provides standardized tactical training and certification of unit instructor qualifications to support Marine Aviation Training and Readiness and assists in developing and employing aviation weapons and tactics. 

Credit:Marine Corps Air Station Yuma Combat Camera:4/3/15

 

Heavy Huey Raid during WTI

06/30/2015

06/30/2015: U.S. Marines from 1st Battalion, 5th Marines, 1st Marine Division participate in a heavy Huey raid during Weapons and Tactics Instructor (WTI) Course 2-15 at K9 Village near Yuma Proving Grounds, April 8, 2015.

WTI is a seven week event hosted by Marine Aviation Weapons and Tactics Squadron One (MAWTS-1).

MAWTS-1 provides standardized tactical training and certification of unit instructor qualifications to support Marine Aviation Training and Readiness and assists in developing and employing Aviation Weapons and Tactics.

 Credit:Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms:4/8/15

 

 

 

HMAS Melbourne Missile Firing

06/30/2015: The Royal Australian Navy Adelaide class frigate, HMAS Melbourne, has successfully fired two Evolved Sea Sparrow Missiles, reinforcing her war-fighting and mariner skills.

The missile firings were conducted off the coast of New South Wales on 24 June against an unmanned aerial target launched from the Beecroft Range at Jervis Bay.

Melbourne’s MK-41 Vertical Launch System deployed the missiles, controlled in flight, resulting in a successful engagement with the target as part of her operational training program.

The Evolved Sea Sparrow is a medium-range, semi-active homing missile that makes flight corrections via radar and midcourse data uplinks.

It can be used against Surface-to-Air and Surface-to-Surface targets.

The missile is one of the suite of weapons use by Australian frigates.

Later this year, Melbourne will deploy to the Middle East as part of Operation MANITOU where she will support efforts to counter and deter terrorism and the trade of narcotics.

Credit: Australian Ministry of Defence:6/26/15

Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 2 flight operations

06/28/2015

06/28/2015: Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 2 showcases its flight operations during routine training at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, N.C., May 30, 2015.

Credit: Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point:6/25/15

UASs were used in a land operation with many years of infrastructure put into place, and this infrastructure – wide ranging, expensive and significant – is hardly going to be waiting for an expeditionary insertion force.

And the con-ops learned in Afghanistan clearly are a problem as well.

As one squadron member put it:

“The UAS controllers were more part of the intelligence system in Afghanistan than of the Marine Corps.

They were an asset which plugged into the intelligence gathering system, and did not operate as we do more generally with air assets in the USMC.

Normally, the airborne assets work with the ground element and share the intelligence picture in an operational context.

This was the norm in Afghanistan: an external asset managed by the intelligence system rather than organic integration with the MAGTF.

As the operations officer put it bluntly: “We are trying to burn down the whole UAV structure which the Marine Corps created in Afghanistan and shaping a new approach, one in which it is integrated within MAGTF operations.”

According to the Marines interviewed, the intelligence community views UAVs as “their assets” because that is how the system evolved in Afghanistan.

“UAV operations personnel would basically check in with the air officer who would then pass them over to intel and they would then work together.”

Rather than having UAVs as part of the fire support system, they became assets which were part of observation and evaluation and the authorization of fires was handled separately.

“This became a loop rather than a straight line which is where we would like it be when we operate as a MAGTF.”

The separation of Marine Corps UAV assets was the norm rather than the exception.

“When I would fly in Afghanistan, I might look down and see a Shadow or Scan Eagle below me, but I never once coordinated with these assts.

I had no idea what they were looking at.

I just knew that they were below me,” noted the Operations Officer.

Lt General David A. Deptula, who in his last active duty position oversaw the planning, policy, and development of Air Force UAVs, and grew that force by over 500 percent in the Air Force, agreed with the Marine officers interviewed about the need for integration.

“One of the biggest advantages of remotely piloted aircraft is that they allow for the condensation of the ‘find, fix, and finish’ kill chain onto one platform.

To capitalize on this capability these aircraft need to be integrated into the entire combat enterprise, not just one piece of it.”

That is exactly what the next phase of UAVs involve in the Marine Corps—the integration of these systems within the Air Combat Element (ACE) of the MAGTF.

https://sldinfo.com/shaping-the-way-ahead-for-unmanned-aerial-systems-for-the-usmc-a-return-visit-to-vmu-2/

Multiple Osprey Flyoff of USS Bonhomme Richard

06/27/2015

06/27/2015: U.S. Marine Corps MV-22B Ospreys flight operations on the USS Bonhomme Richard (LHD 6), off of the coast of South Korea, April 2, 2015.

The aircraft are with Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron 262 (Reinforced), 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit.

The 31st MEU is the Marine Corps’ only continuously forward-deployed expeditionary unit and is prepared to respond to a wide range of military operations ranging from humanitarian assistance missions to limited combat operations. 

Credit:31st MEU:4/2/15

 

 

 

 

Dropping in Unannounced: 15th MEU Marines Execute Vertical Raid

06/25/2015

06/25/2015: U.S. Marines with Lima Company, Battalion Landing Team 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit, execute a vertical raid during Composite Training Unit Exercise (COMPTUEX) March 29, 2015.

These Marines departed the USS Essex (LHD 2), off the coast of San Diego, in MV-22B Ospreys and landed in Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, Calif.  

Credit:15th Marine Expeditionary Unit:3/29/15

 

BALTOPS Exercise and Polish Defense

06/23/2015

06/23/2015: A major maritime exercise involving five thousand six hundred air, maritime and ground forces has moved from Sweden to Poland.

This multinational maritime exercise is in its 43rd iteration. BALTOPS 2015 has taken place across Poland, Sweden, German and throughout the Baltic Sea.

The exercise is designed to enhance flexibility and interoperability, as well as demonstrate the resolve of allied and partner forces to defend the Baltic region.

A total of 49 ships, 61 aircraft, one submarine and a combined landing force of 700 Swedish, Finnish, UK and US troops are participating from 17 NATO nations and partner nations. Amphibious operations are highlighted.

Credit: Natochannel :6/17/15